Lozier Jeffrey D, Strange James P, Heraghty Sam D
Department of Biological Sciences The University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama USA.
Department of Entomology The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA.
Ecol Evol. 2023 Jan 31;13(2):e9778. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9778. eCollection 2023 Feb.
Understanding historical range shifts and population size variation provides an important context for interpreting contemporary genetic diversity. Methods to predict changes in species distributions and model changes in effective population size ( ) using whole genomes make it feasible to examine how temporal dynamics influence diversity across populations. We investigate variation and climate-associated range shifts to examine the origins of a previously observed latitudinal heterozygosity gradient in the bumble bee Cresson (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Latreille) in western North America. We analyze whole genomes from a latitude-elevation cline using sequentially Markovian coalescent models of through time to test whether relatively low diversity in southern high-elevation populations is a result of long-term differences in . We use Maxent models of the species range over the last 130,000 years to evaluate range shifts and stability. fluctuates with climate across populations, but more genetically diverse northern populations have maintained greater over the late Pleistocene and experienced larger expansions with climatically favorable time periods. Northern populations also experienced larger bottlenecks during the last glacial period, which matched the loss of range area near these sites; however, bottlenecks were not sufficient to erode diversity maintained during periods of large . A genome sampled from an island population indicated a severe postglacial bottleneck, indicating that large recent postglacial declines are detectable if they have occurred. Genetic diversity was not related to niche stability or glacial-period bottleneck size. Instead, spatial expansions and increased connectivity during favorable climates likely maintain diversity in the north while restriction to high elevations maintains relatively low diversity despite greater stability in southern regions. Results suggest genetic diversity gradients reflect long-term differences in dynamics and also emphasize the unique effects of isolation on insular habitats for bumble bees. Patterns are discussed in the context of conservation under climate change.
了解历史上的分布范围变化和种群大小变异为解释当代遗传多样性提供了重要背景。利用全基因组预测物种分布变化和有效种群大小( )变化的方法,使得研究时间动态如何影响种群间的多样性成为可能。我们调查 变异和与气候相关的分布范围变化,以研究北美西部克氏熊蜂(膜翅目:蜜蜂科:拉特雷尔熊蜂属)先前观察到的纬度杂合度梯度的起源。我们使用随时间变化的连续马尔可夫合并模型,分析来自纬度 - 海拔梯度的全基因组,以测试南部高海拔种群相对较低的多样性是否是 长期差异的结果。我们使用过去13万年该物种分布范围的最大熵模型来评估分布范围的变化和稳定性。 在不同种群中随气候波动,但遗传多样性更高的北方种群在更新世晚期保持了更大的 ,并在气候适宜时期经历了更大规模的扩张。北方种群在最后一个冰川期也经历了更大的瓶颈,这与这些地点附近分布范围的丧失相匹配;然而,瓶颈不足以侵蚀在 较大时期维持的多样性。从一个岛屿种群采样的基因组显示出严重的冰期后瓶颈,表明如果近期发生了大规模的冰期后衰退,是可以检测到的。遗传多样性与生态位稳定性或冰川期瓶颈大小无关。相反,在有利气候条件下的空间扩张和连通性增加可能维持了北方的多样性,而尽管南部地区稳定性更高,但限制在高海拔地区导致多样性相对较低。结果表明遗传多样性梯度反映了 动态的长期差异,也强调了隔离对熊蜂岛屿栖息地的独特影响。在气候变化背景下讨论了这些模式与保护的关系。